Pedestrian safety efforts discussed at traffic panel in Glendale

January 31, 2014|By Veronica Rocha, veronica.rocha@latimes.com

A shoe, tagged as evidence, on the street at the scene where… (Tim Berger / Staff…)

After Lidiya Badalyan was struck in a crosswalk by a driver in July near Glendale High School, she was hospitalized for two months and remained in a full-body brace as she recovered from several broken bones.

But life just isn’t the same anymore for the 75-year-old resident, said her daughter, Lousine Sogomonian.

Badalyan maintained an active lifestyle and worked out four times a week. But she now uses a walker and can’t stand for long periods of time.

“I see the problem is middle-aged drivers,” she said. “They are not paying attention. They are thinking about other things.”

But a driver’s inattentiveness is not the only problem, said experts Thursday at a Traffic Safety Panel — which Glendale’s Armenian National Committee hosted.

Pedestrians, especially seniors, must be educated about the rules of the road, experts said.

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Badalyan’s accident was one of 111 pedestrian-involved collisions that occurred last year in Glendale.

While the number of collisions was up by only three from 2012, pedestrian-involved fatalities jumped from one to five last year.

Of the five people killed on city streets, one victim was 55 years old while the other victims were older than 69.

Concerns from residents, police and city officials about the increasing pedestrian-involved collision and fatality rate have only exacerbated, especially following a fatal pedestrian-involved collision on Monday.